Right, and I understand that.
It says that we know that China does not have to give national treatment or most-favoured-nation treatment to Canadian investments going forward beyond any existing nonconforming measures in place now.
In other words, from my understanding and my information, China, being a command economy, being a state-controlled economy, would have many nonconforming measures that will currently stay in to constrain Canadian investment in the future. Is that correct?